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Ferndale
Ferndale is a small town situated in the Rhondda Valley in the area borough of Rhondda Cynon Taf, Wales. Neighbouring towns are Blaenllechau, Maerdy and Tylorstown. Ferndale was industrialised in the mid-19th century. The initial coal mine shaft was sunk in 1857 and was the initial neighborhood to be intensively industrialised in the Rhondda Valley. In Welsh, Ferndale is referred to as Glynrhedynog, the name of among the old farms on which the community is constructed. In its early stage Glynrhedynog was additionally known as Trerhondda after the name of the initial big chapel to be built in the community. The identifying of settlements after chapels prevailed in Wales at the time, as is received town names such as Bethesda, Beulah and also Horeb, but neither Glynrhedynog neither Trerhondda was destined to be utilized for long. Glynrhedynog is made from the words "glyn" meaning valley and also "rhedynog" indicating ferny, therefore coal from the Glynrhedynog pits was marketed as Ferndale coal, a much easier name for English customers to assimilate. The Ferndale pits are what drew the workforce as well as their households to the location, and by the 1880s "Ferndale" was well developed as a growing community. With the phasing in of bilingual roadway indications from the late 1980s onwards, the name Glynrhedynog slowly came back and also is now the formally marked Welsh language name for Ferndale. The Welsh language gets on the increase in Ferndale after the village took on the English language throughout the Industrial change. A Welsh language school is positioned near the park and the school is named after the park's lake, 'Llyn-y-Forwyn.' (The Maiden's Lake).